Automated segmentation of retinal vessels plays a pivotal role in early diagnosis of ophthalmic disorders. In this paper, a blood vessel segmentation algorithm using an enhanced fuzzy min-max neural network supervised classifier is proposed. The input to the network is an optimal 11-D feature vector which consists of spatial as well as frequency domain features extracted from each pixel of a fundus image. The essence of the method is its hyperbox classifier which performs online learning and gives binary output without any need of post-processing. The method is tested on publicly available databases DRIVE and STARE. The results are compared with the existing methods in the literature. The proposed method exhibits efficient performance and can be implemented in computer aided screening and diagnosis of retinal diseases. The method attains an average accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of 95.73%, 74.75% and 97.81% on DRIVE database and 95.51%, 74.65% and 97.11% on STARE database, respectively.
To improve the accuracy of retinal vessel segmentation, a retinal vessel segmentation algorithm for color fundus images based on back-propagation (BP) neural network is proposed according to the characteristics of retinal blood vessels. Four kinds of green channel image enhancement results of adaptive histogram equalization, morphological processing, Gaussian matched filtering, and Hessian matrix filtering are used to form feature vectors. The BP neural network is input to segment blood vessels. Experiments on the color fundus image libraries DRIVE and STARE show that this algorithm can obtain complete retinal blood vessel segmentation as well as connected vessel stems and terminals. When segmenting most small blood vessels, the average accuracy on the DRIVE library reaches 0.9477, and the average accuracy on the STARE library reaches 0.9498, which has a good segmentation effect. Through verification, the algorithm is feasible and effective for blood vessel segmentation of color fundus images and can detect more capillaries.
Diabetic retinopathy screening involves assessment of the retina with attention to a series of indicative features, i.e., blood vessels, optic disk and macula etc. The detection of changes in blood vessel structure and flow due to either vessel narrowing, complete occlusions or neovascularization is of great importance. Blood vessel segmentation is the basic foundation while developing retinal screening systems since vessels serve as one of the main retinal landmark features. This article presents an automated method for enhancement and segmentation of blood vessels in retinal images. We present a method that uses 2-D Gabor wavelet for vessel enhancement due to their ability to enhance directional structures and a new multilayered thresholding technique for accurate vessel segmentation. The strength of proposed segmentation technique is that it performs well for large variations in illumination and even for capturing the thinnest vessels. The system is tested on publicly available retinal images databases of manually labeled images, i.e., DRIVE and STARE. The proposed method for blood vessel segmentation achieves an average accuracy of 94.85% and an average area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.9669. We compare our method with recently published methods and experimental results show that proposed method gives better results. 相似文献
The change in morphology, diameter, branching pattern or tortuosity of retinal blood vessels is an important indicator of various clinical disorders of the eye and the body. This paper reports an automated method for segmentation of blood vessels in retinal images. A unique combination of techniques for vessel centerlines detection and morphological bit plane slicing is presented to extract the blood vessel tree from the retinal images. The centerlines are extracted by using the first order derivative of a Gaussian filter in four orientations and then evaluation of derivative signs and average derivative values is performed. Mathematical morphology has emerged as a proficient technique for quantifying the blood vessels in the retina. The shape and orientation map of blood vessels is obtained by applying a multidirectional morphological top-hat operator with a linear structuring element followed by bit plane slicing of the vessel enhanced grayscale image. The centerlines are combined with these maps to obtain the segmented vessel tree. The methodology is tested on three publicly available databases DRIVE, STARE and MESSIDOR. The results demonstrate that the performance of the proposed algorithm is comparable with state of the art techniques in terms of accuracy, sensitivity and specificity. 相似文献
The inspection of retinal fundus images allows medical doctors to diagnose various pathologies. Computer-aided diagnosis systems can be used to assist in this process. As a first step, such systems delineate the vessel tree from the background. We propose a method for the delineation of blood vessels in retinal images that is effective for vessels of different thickness. In the proposed method, we employ a set of B-COSFIRE filters selective for vessels and vessel-endings. Such a set is determined in an automatic selection process and can adapt to different applications. We compare the performance of different selection methods based upon machine learning and information theory. The results that we achieve by performing experiments on two public benchmark data sets, namely DRIVE and STARE, demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach. 相似文献
Detection of blood vessels in retinal fundus image is the preliminary step to diagnose several retinal diseases. There exist
several methods to automatically detect blood vessels from retinal image with the aid of different computational methods.
However, all these methods require lengthy processing time. The method proposed here acquires binary vessels from a RGB retinal
fundus image in almost real time. Initially, the phase congruency of a retinal image is generated, which is a soft-classification
of blood vessels. Phase congruency is a dimensionless quantity that is invariant to changes in image brightness or contrast;
hence, it provides an absolute measure of the significance of feature points. This experiment acquires phase congruency of
an image using Log-Gabor wavelets. To acquire a binary segmentation, thresholds are applied on the phase congruency image.
The process of determining the best threshold value is based on area under the relative operating characteristic (ROC) curve.
The proposed method is able to detect blood vessels in a retinal fundus image within 10 s on a PC with (accuracy, area under
ROC curve) = (0.91, 0.92), and (0.92, 0.94) for the STARE and the DRIVE databases, respectively. 相似文献
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the major ophthalmic pathological cause for loss of eye sight due to changes in blood vessel structure. The retinal blood vessel morphology helps to identify the successive stages of a number of sight threatening diseases and thereby paves a way to classify its severity. This paper presents an automated retinal vessel segmentation technique using neural network, which can be used in computer analysis of retinal images, e.g., in automated screening for diabetic retinopathy. Furthermore, the algorithm proposed in this paper can be used for the analysis of vascular structures of the human retina. Changes in retinal vasculature are one of the main symptoms of diseases like hypertension and diabetes mellitus. Since the size of typical retinal vessel is only a few pixels wide, it is critical to obtain precise measurements of vascular width using automated retinal image analysis. This method segments each image pixel as vessel or nonvessel, which in turn, used for automatic recognition of the vasculature in retinal images. Retinal blood vessels are identified by means of a multilayer perceptron neural network, for which the inputs are derived from the Gabor and moment invariants-based features. Back propagation algorithm, which provides an efficient technique to change the weights in a feed forward network is utilized in our method. The performance of our technique is evaluated and tested on publicly available DRIVE database and we have obtained illustrative vessel segmentation results for those images. 相似文献
Arterial-venous classification of retinal blood vessels is important for the automatic detection of cardiovascular diseases such as hypertensive retinopathy and stroke. In this paper, we propose an arterial-venous classification (AVC) method, which focuses on feature extraction and selection from vessel centerline pixels. The vessel centerline is extracted after the preprocessing of vessel segmentation and optic disc (OD) localization. Then, a region of interest (ROI) is extracted around OD, and the most efficient features of each centerline pixel in ROI are selected from the local features, grey-level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) features, and an adaptive local binary patten (A-LBP) feature by using a max-relevance and min-redundancy (mRMR) scheme. Finally, a feature-weighted K-nearest neighbor (FW-KNN) algorithm is used to classify the arterial-venous vessels. The experimental results on the DRIVE database and INSPIRE-AVR database achieve the high accuracy of 88.65% and 88.51% in ROI, respectively. 相似文献
Accurate retinal vessel segmentation is very challenging. Recently, the deep learning based method has greatly improved performance. However, the non-vascular structures usually harm the performance and some low contrast small vessels are hard to be detected after several down-sampling operations. To solve these problems, we design a deep fusion network (DF-Net) including multiscale fusion, feature fusion and classifier fusion for multi-source vessel image segmentation. The multiscale fusion module allows the network to detect blood vessels with different scales. The feature fusion module fuses deep features with vessel responses extracted from a Frangi filter to obtain a compact yet domain invariant feature representation. The classifier fusion module provides the network more supervision. DF-Net also predicts the parameter of the Frangi filter to avoid manually picking the best parameters. The learned Frangi filter enhances the feature map of the multiscale network and restores the edge information loss caused by down-sampling operations. The proposed end-to-end network is easy to train and the inference time for one image is 41ms on a GPU. The model outperforms state-of-the-art methods and achieves the accuracy of 96.14%, 97.04%, 98.02% from three publicly available fundus image datasets DRIVE, STARE, CHASEDB1, respectively. The code is available at https://github.com/y406539259/DF-Net. 相似文献
In medicine, diagnosis is as important as treatment. Retinal blood vessels are the most easily visible vessels in the whole body, and therefore, play a key role in the diagnosis of numerous diseases and eye disorders. Systematic and eye diseases cause morphologic variations, such as the growing, narrowing or branching of retinal blood vessels. Imaging-based screening of retinal blood vessels plays an important role in the identification and follow-up of eye diseases. Therefore, automatic retinal vessel segmentation can be used to diagnose and monitor those diseases. Computer-aided algorithms are required for the analysis of progression of eye diseases. This study proposes a hybrid method that provides a combination of pre-processing and data augmentation methods with a deep learning model. Pre-processing was used to solve the irregular clarification problems and to form a contrast between the background and retinal blood vessels. After pre-processing step, a convolutional neural network (CNN) was designed and then trained for the extraction of retinal blood vessels. In the training phase, data augmentation was performed to improve training performance. The CNN was trained and tested in the DRIVE database, which is commonly used in retinal blood vessel segmentation and publicly available for studies in this area. Results showed that the proposed system extracted vessels with a sensitivity of 77.78%, specificity of 97,84%, precision of 84.17% and accuracy of 95.27%.
This study also compared the results to those of previous studies. The comparison showed that the proposed method is an efficient and successful method for extracting retinal blood vessels. Moreover, the pre-processing phases improved the system performance. We believe that the proposed method and results will make contribution to the literature.
Automatic extraction of blood vessels is an important step in computer-aided diagnosis in ophthalmology. The blood vessels have different widths, orientations, and structures. Therefore, the extracting of the proper feature vector is a critical step especially in the classifier-based vessel segmentation methods. In this paper, a new multi-scale rotation-invariant local binary pattern operator is employed to extract efficient feature vector for different types of vessels in the retinal images. To estimate the vesselness value of each pixel, the obtained multi-scale feature vector is applied to an adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system. Then by applying proper top-hat transform, thresholding, and length filtering, the thick and thin vessels are highlighted separately. The performance of the proposed method is measured on the publicly available DRIVE and STARE databases. The average accuracy 0.942 along with true positive rate (TPR) 0.752 and false positive rate (FPR) 0.041 is very close to the manual segmentation rates obtained by the second observer. The proposed method is also compared with several state-of-the-art methods. The proposed method shows higher average TPR in the same range of FPR and accuracy.